Published by the Church of Scientology
International

CCHRs International Human Rights Award was presented to author, investigative journalist, broadcaster and producer Gary Null (top) and to Sandra Everett, left, pictured with CCHRs Bruce Wiseman. Everett founded Citizens Rescuing Youth, a group that frees children from psychiatric facilites. The awards ceremony featured a performance by vocalist Raven Kane.

hen the Citizens Commission on Human Rights celebrated its 26th
anniversary this year, it marked the occasion in Los Angeles with awards
presented to international leaders in the cause of human rights. The
event was attended by 450 people, including leaders in medicine, human
rights, government and education. Awards were presented to Gary Null and
Sandra Everett in recognition of their human rights work.

Null, an author, investigative journalist, broadcaster and producer, has
exposed corruption and abuses in psychiatry, the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration, and other areas. Everett formed Citizens Rescuing Youth,
a group freeing children from psychiatric facilities, where abuse is
rampant.

Bruce Wiseman, president of CCHR in the United States, summarized CCHRs
actions in cleaning up the mental health field over the past year,
exposing psychiatrys fraud, waste of taxpayers money and sexual abuse
of patients. He described psychiatry as that faction of the health-care
industry that doesnt work.

Psychiatry betrays its patients with promised help that it never
delivers and commits fraud in staggering amounts $40 billion each year
just in the United States, he said. That is $1,333 every second of
every day. Jan Eastgate, international president of CCHR, described the
worldwide activities of CCHR, including psychiatric atrocities uncovered
in South Africa.

In 1976, Freedom and CCHR exposed appalling psychiatric slave labor
camps, in which 10,000 black patients were incarcerated in degraded
conditions, with the majority sleeping on mats on concrete floors.
Electric shock was administered without anesthetic. A chief state
psychiatrist explained that anesthetics were used on whites and not
blacks because It is simply too expensive, too slow and too risky....
[B]ecause we treat more Africans than Whites, we would have to double our
staff if we used anesthetics.

Information recently brought to light showed that between 1975 and 1989,
1,451 women in the hands of South African psychiatrists, many of them
between 10 and 19 years of age, were sterilized.

Eastgates recent travels to South Africa included work with political,
legal and human rights representatives to investigate psychiatric abuses
so that those responsible can be brought to justice and to ensure such
atrocities do not happen again. The South African government has
announced that a national inquiry is to be held with public hearings in
each of the countrys nine provinces.